Posts Tagged ‘Esperanto’

So I decided to learn Esperanto, which as an avid user of the SRS application Anki, meant I needed to either enter Esperanto’s special characters (ĉ, ĝ, ĥ, ĵ, ŝ, ŭ) into my flash cards, which can’t easily be typed with the US International keyboard layout, or I could deal with the ugly “x method” workaround (cx, gx, hx, jx, sx, ux). At first, I was only creating Esperanto cards from my Linux computers at home, which let me use an Esperanto keyboard layout to type in the special characters. Pretty soon though, I found myself creating cards from my Windows machine at work during breaks. There is no Esperanto keyboard layout in Windows by default, so I tried to install some third party keyboard layouts without success. I eventually came across a program called Ek, which seemed to do the job of letting me type special characters, except in Anki where it would only type “ĉ”. So I just dealt with the “x method” and was typing words like vojagxas instead of vojaĝas. I don’t know why, but after a while all the x’s began to really bother me. I didn’t want to see mangxi in my flash cards, it just doesn’t seem as natural as manĝi does. So I did what any other software developer would do….

I wrote some code.

Specifically, I wrote a plugin for Anki which converts all those terrible cx, gx, hx, jx, sx, and ux combinations into the aesthetically pleasing ĉ, ĝ, ĥ, ĵ. ŝ. and ŭ characters. Prior to this I’ve never written a plugin for Anki, and even now I claim no expertise. Anki is written in Python, and so are its plugins. I found a plugin that adds some support for the German language to Anki and used that as a model to build my plugin.

To use the Esperanto plugin, open Anki, go to File -> Download -> Shared Plugin. Type “esperanto” into the search box. My plugin is the only one that matches that search, so it should be highlighted already. The plugin is called “Esperanto Support for Anki”. Click Ok and it should download and install for you. In your deck, when you want to add a card for Esperanto, make sure the card is using the “Esperanto” model rather than “Basic” model.

I’m open to suggestions and feedback, and if you are curious about the code at all, open up your Anki plugins folder and take it a look. The code is right there and it’s very simple.